* $2.5 billion over three years for Wynne’s “Fair Hydro Plan”, in which she’s using taxpayers’ money to subsidize the electricity bills of hydro ratepayers, despite the fact taxpayers and ratepayers are the same people.

* $20 million for “respite care to people who volunteer to care for a loved one.”

* $200 million for more daycare.

* $1.6 billion this year (based on $16 billion over 10 years) for new schools.

* $200 million over three years for “First Nation, Metis and Inuit ... post secondary education and training.”

* $465 million annually for a pharmacare program to provide free prescription drugs to all Ontario children from birth to 24 years of age.

* $150 million over three years for a minimum income pilot project for 4,000 low-income households in Hamilton, Thunder Bay and Lindsay.

* $1.3 billion over three years “to reduce (medical) wait times.”

* $518 million “booster shot” for hospitals.

* $85 million over three years for home care.

* $200 million “to improve the energy efficiency of our schools.”

No doubt some of this spending is worthwhile and, to be fair, some of it overlaps.

For example, the $1.8 billion in annual revenue from cap and trade will presumably help pay for the $200 million spent to improve energy efficiency in schools.

Taxpayers will also receive partial returns from some programs, such as Wynne’s “Fair Hydro Plan”, which lowers electricity rates.

That said, all this assumes all the money to be spent on these programs will go where the Wynne government says it will go, in the amounts and during the time frames specified.

On that score, remember it was the Liberal government of Dalton McGuinty, in which Wynne was a senior cabinet minister, that told us the cost of cancelling two controversial gas plants in Oakville and Mississauga prior to the 2011 election, which the opposition parties dubbed “the Liberal seat saver program”, would be $230 million over 20 years.

That turned out to be up to $1.1 billion, according to the auditor general.